Female undergraduate's perceptions of intrusive behavior in 12 countries

Lorraine Sheridan, Adrian J. Scott, John Archer, Karl Roberts

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The present study examines young women's (N=1,734) perceptions of the unacceptability of 47 intrusive activities enacted by men. Female undergraduate psychology students from 12 countries (Armenia, Australia, England, Egypt, Finland, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Portugal, Scotland, Trinidad) indicated which of 47 intrusive activities they considered to be unacceptable. Responses were compared with parasite-stress values, a measure of global gender equality and Hofstede's dimensions of national cultures. There was no unanimous agreement on any of the items, even for those relating to forced sexual violence. Cluster analysis yielded four clusters: Aggression and surveillance (most agreement that the constituent items were unacceptable), Unwanted attention, Persistent courtship and impositions, and Courtship and information seeking (least agreement that the constituent items were unacceptable). There were no significant relationships between the Aggression and surveillance or Courtship and information seeking clusters and the measure of gender equality, Hofstede's dimensions of national cultures or the measure of parasite stress. For the Unwanted attention and Persistent courtship and impositions clusters, women residing in countries with higher gender inequality and higher parasite-stress were less accepting of behavior associated with uncommitted sexual relations, and women in more individualistic societies with higher levels of gender equality were less accepting of monitoring activities. Culture may take precedence over personal interpretations of the unacceptability of intrusive behavior that is not obviously harmful or benign in nature.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)531-543
Number of pages13
JournalAggressive Behavior
Volume43
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • cluster analysis
  • psychology students
  • sex discrimination against women
  • stalking
  • women college students
  • young women

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